my recent reads..

Atomic Accidents: A History of Nuclear Meltdowns and Disasters; From the Ozark Mountains to Fukushima
Power Sources and Supplies: World Class Designs
Red Storm Rising
Locked On
Analog Circuits Cookbook
The Teeth Of The Tiger
Sharpe's Gold
Without Remorse
Practical Oscillator Handbook
Red Rabbit

Sunday, August 05, 2007

OTN in China and the importance of aggregators

Justin reported the stunning success of the OTN lounge at OpenWorld Shanghai 2007. Although I never made it to the lounge, the buzz in the halls and corridors was great testament to the enthusiasm of the Oracle community in this part of the world.

My trip up to Shanghai also provided a pointed reminder of China's on-again-off-again dance with blogspot (currently "off-again") when I tried to update my blog.

Now I'm not going to argue that China needs to cease its attempts to censor the net since I respect it's authority to exercise such control, just as we do in the west but with different values. However I must admit I had never thought of the collateral damage inflicted on the Oracle community of users in China, since it seems quite a large number of bloggers on Oracle topics are using one of the blocked platforms.

Fortunately it seems that the various Oracle-topic aggregators have not been hit by any of the blocks (and presumably won't be because of the generally non-political content).

So I'd encourage the aggregators to note the importance of aggregating full-text feeds with attachments ... it may be the only chance that some people may have of reading the content (also works better for anyone with an offline reader anyway).

For Oracle, I'd suggest this is another reason why it would be great to open up to hosting non-employee blogs.

2 comments:

Eddie Awad said...

China's on-again-off-again dance with blogspot

I had the same issue with blogspot when I visited China back in 2005.

I'd encourage the aggregators to note the importance of aggregating full-text feeds with attachments

OraNA.info does not truncate feeds. It's mostly the blog author who decides to publish a truncated feed.

it may be the only chance that some people may have of reading the content

I agree. You do not have to go as far away as China, many employers (including mine) have decided to block blogspot.com and any URL with the word blog in it.

I believe that blog authors should always publish full feed if they care about increasing their readership. I for one rarely click through a truncated feed. That's why I switched my blog's feed to full-text.

Regards

Unknown said...

That's a good point Eddie about making sure your personal feed includes full source.

I notice that many of the Oracle aggregators (like OraNA) do pass that through, but some still don't (like the official Oracle blogs feed)